Racial discrimination against Haitians in the Dominican Republic
The
treatment of Haitian migrants and their offspring in the Dominican Republic is
part of a broader struggle for the rights of immigrants who are often exploited
for cheap labor yet marginalized socially and used as political
tools.
Indeed, politicians are increasingly finding
success in capitalizing on nationalist sentiments through the age-old tactic of
blaming immigrants for all of the country’s economic woes—lack of jobs,
strained public resources, high crime, etc. A similar trend is evident in Europe, the US, and
other nations with increasingly diverse populations and growing immigrant
communities. One can look no
further than Arizona’s notorious “show me your papers” law that forced many
documented and undocumented immigrants to flee the state out of fear of being
targeted by government officials and vigilantes emboldened by institutionalized
discrimination against Latino immigrants.
Similarly, the Dominican Republic’s immigration
policies and growing anti-Haitian sentiment on the ground are succeeding in
creating a great sense of insecurity for thousands of people of Haitian
descent. The Dominican government has reported that over 17,000 have
“voluntarily” left the country for Haiti following a June 17 deadline. As
deportations accelerate, thousands more are expected to flood Haitian border
towns, leaving everything that they know behind for a country that they have
never lived in and where they have no family ties. A sizable number only speak
Spanish, and will undoubtedly have a hard time securing viable employment in
Haiti where Creole and French are the official languages.
Some who defend the controversial policy say it’s
an issue of law and order, and that the only individuals who will be affected
are Haitians living in the Dominican Republic illegally. But that’s not the
case. A 2013 ruling by the
DR’s constitutional court stripped an estimated 200,000 people of
their Dominican citizenship, as the legislation denies citizenship to the
offspring of undocumented immigrants, even if born on Dominican soil. The
bill is retroactive to 1929, thereby invalidating the nationality of several
generations of mostly Haitian-descendent individuals and families.
Drawing
wide criticism for its violation of human-rights principles, stemming from a
history of systematic discrimination against people with Haitian heritage,
the Dominican Republic instituted a “regularization program” for individuals
born in the country with at least one parent who was a citizen or legal
resident. The program was also supposed to provide undocumented migrants
an opportunity to register for a two-year residency permit, and eventually
apply for naturalization. And although
56,000 people have had their citizenship restored, many caught in the wide
net of the immigration law remain in limbo and are under imminent threat of
expulsion from the country. While some 250,000 have started the
application process, only 300 residency permits have been issued. Denial of
birth certificates and other identity documents to people with Haitian
ancestry has been a longstanding practice that has facilitated the current
crisis. Without official documentation of their birth in the Dominican
Republic, many affected by the ruling have become stateless. Additionally,
human-rights groups have sounded the alarm about the potential targeting of
people with darker complexions (those who “look Haitian”).
“The
Dominican Republic is using the guise of immigration control to push thousands
of Dominicans of Haitian descent, including ‘black-profiled’ Dominicans out of
the country,” said Giles Charleston, co-founder and board member of the
Association of Haitian Professionals. “It is not just an issue pertinent
to DR and Haiti, but a larger issue concerning justice and human dignity that
should compel every person around the [world] to stand up and not sit on the
sidelines,” Charleston told Quartz.
Understandably, some Dominicans hold a different
view. In response to an article I
wrote in February, I heard from Dominicans who resented what they see as
interference in their sovereign affairs. When mayor of New York Bill de Blasio
spoke out against the new spoke out against the new deportation law at an
event on June 21, a handful of protestors attempted to shout him down. They
scolded him for spreading perceived misinformation about Dominican migratory
law, brandished signs reading “Bill de Blasio Makes Everything a Racial
Matter,” according to The New York Times.
But
one positive development that has come out of what appears on the surface to be
a growing rift between Haitians and Dominicans is renewed dialogue and a
recognition that there there is a complex history and relationship that
exists between the two nations. Ulises Jorge Bidó, a Dominican American
who lives in Maryland contacted me in February to express his concerns with
what I had written, along with wider media coverage that he characterized as
painting an incomplete picture.
“Dominicans get really passionate about this when
they hear or read the accusations that the only reason that this is happening
is because of racism,” he wrote to me. “Yes, we have our ‘nationalist’ fringe
who have some crazy ideas that are rejected by the overwhelming majority of
Dominicans. Like any country on Earth, you will find prejudice among some of
us.”
Meanwhile, other members of the Dominican
community have expressed direct opposition to the new law. Groups like We Are All Dominicans are
leading efforts to call out what they see as endemic racism and xenophobia in
their home country. They have organized several protests in New York including
an upcoming July 1st action and produced an activist toolkit and
#BlackLivesMatterDR reading list.
Indeed, many who have expressed their concerns
about the situation in the Dominican Republic view themselves as global
citizens with a shared stake and interest in the humane and dignified treatment
of all people, regardless of their immigration status or ethnic or racial
background.
Bree
Newsome, the heroic activist who this past Saturday climbed a flag pole on
South Carolina’s state grounds and removed a Confederate flag flying there made
this link in her statemen explaining why she took the courageous step
that she did: “I removed the flag not only in defiance of those who enslaved my
ancestors in the southern United States, but also in defiance of the oppression
that continues against black people globally in 2015, including the ongoing
ethnic cleansing in the Dominican Republic,” she said. “To all those who
might label me an ‘outside agitator,’ I say to you that humanitarianism has no
borders. I am a global citizen.”
https://qz.com/445192/discrimination-against-haitians-in-the-dominican-republic-is-a-borderless-issue/

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